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Last DT to Reveal Name of Miss SC
By RON KIRBY
Daily Trojan Managing Editor
Mirror, mirror on the wall, who's the fairest of them all?
That’s the question that will be answered when the results of the Daily Trojan’s Second Annual Miss University of Southprn California Contest are announced In the final issue of the paper this year.
A picture of the winner of this year's Miss SC contest will grace the cover of a special edition scheduled to hit the stands Friday, May 13.
Miss SC Contest Chairman Ron Zeigler has arranged an all-expense-paid trip to Las Vegas for the winner and guest, evenings for a week as a guest: of local night clubs, a portrait from Garfield, a wardrobe selection from Silverwoods. a trip to Metro-Gold-wyn-Mayer studios and lunch with the stars.
The kickoff dinner, at which all candidates will
be introduced and all details of the contest clarified, will be held Monday, April 25 at Julie’s restaurant.
The only elimination will be conducted on Wednes* as official hostess for this year's Songfest on April 14. Other prizes will be announced later.
Any SC girl currently reigning as the queen or sweetheart of any campus organization is eligible to be entered as a contestant for the Miss SC contest. The Homecoming Queen may not participate in the contest because the committee in charge felt that her entering another queen competition, with the possibility of losing, would reduce the stature of the Troy-dition of Homecoming.
All eligible candidates will receive an invitation to compete through the mail sometime this week. They should send their acceptances to Ron Zeigler at the Daily Trojan, 428 SU, by Friday, April 2*2. day, April 25, when five finalists will be selected, teigler said that no students will take part in the
judging at any time.
Members of the faculty, alumni and administration will handle elimination judging.
The five finalists will have to live through an anxious week before one of them is selected as Miss SC by members of the Greater Los Angeles Press Club on Thursday, April 25. The finalists will be introduced to members of the L.A. Dodger ^baseball team at the Press Club’s Dodger Night prior to the final judging.
Each of the five finalists will be the subject of a feature personality sketch to appear "on the frontpage of the Daily Trojan in the week prior to the selection ol' the winner Miss SC candidates will also be busy as hostesses at Alumni Day, scheduled for Saturday, April 30. „
Members of the committee planning the contest, in addition to Chairman Zeigler, are Songfest Publicity Chairman Tim Elbourne, Songfest Chairman Bart Porter, Mortarboard President Barbara Myers,
Alumni Representative Sandy Quinn, Daily Trojan Editor Larry Fisher and Managing Editor Ron Kibby.
The general theme of the special Daily Trojan supplement, which is being edited by Penny Lernoux, is the revelation of things unknown about SC and things that have happened on campus this year for the first time.
The contest was conceived to establish Miss SC as a exciting highlight to the Spring semester. Winner of last year’s contest and prizes was pretty Miss Linda Livingston.
She testifies to the fun and excitement that is a part »of the contest.
The answer to the question of whcf's the fairest maiden in the land of Troy will be made known in the final edition of the Daily Trojan on May 13. Be sure to get your copy.
PAGE THREE AWS Board Travels South For Regional Meeting
Southern
Cal ifornia
DAI LY
TROJAN
PAGE FOUR Tennis Team Hosts Arizona in Matches Today
VOL. LI
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, TUESDAY, APRIL 19, 1960
NO. 105
Chinese 1A, B Will Combine In One Class
A new Chinese study program. combining two semesters’ work into one. Mill be launched by the department of Asiatic Studies next semester. Dr. Theodore H. Chen, head of the department, announced yesterday.
The new program, made possible by a recent grant from the U.S. Department of Public Education. will enable students to learn Chinese In half the usual time and twice as well, said Dr. Chen.
The main feature of the study plan is the combination of Ihe two-semester introductory Chinese course into a one-semes-ter course, A.S. lOOab.
Native Instructor Students will allend the class five days a week. In addition, they will work with a native instructor in conversation and drill for two hours.
Plans for the new six-u n i t course also include spending one hour a week in the language laboratory.
Work with native instructors on a personal, tutorial basis w ill be one of the most valuable advantages of the new course plan, said Dr. Chen.
Study SphrIoiis The instructors will give students a chance to speak cn an informal basis and allow them to become more involved in 1he language, he said.
“The two-hour drill and sludv sessions aie planned to replace part of the time a student would normally spend at honv in preparation for his lessons.-’
They do not increase the work load of the students but make learning easier and more effective. he stressed.
Chines*« Movies Additional instructors will be hired bv the department to help with the tutoring.
Selected movies in Chinese with vocabulary and explanations provided by the instructional staff are also being planned for the innovatory course, he said.
“The new facilities and methods will enable students to learn to read, speak and write Chinese more fluently and more efficiently in a considerably shorter period of time," he emphasized.
By taking advantage of the new study program, students can fulfill their langauge requirements in one year rather than the normal two.
For example, a student can take A.S. lOOab during the fall semester, receiving" six units credit, and then complete 200ai> during the spring semester, ful-(Continued on page 2)
Time Out From Books For A Dip
Westwood s PE Policy Raises Question Here
ALL WET—About to make a big splash at SC (in the pool, that is) are left to right, Dee Harte, Chsryl Warden, Grant Kuhns and Don Douglas. This is to let the
Daily Trojan Photo By Bob Holste
readers know that the pool is open every day, except Fridays, from twelve to one and again from three to four in the afternoons. It is a'so coen in the evenings.
Graduate Prizes Co to Six In Three Campus Schools
Six SC students in the department of biology, the School of Library Science and the School or Philosophy have been awarded fellowships to aid them in their graduate studies.
David Wake and Arnold Kluge have each been awarded fellowships from the National Science Foundation.
Wake, a graduate student in the department of biology, will receive a $2200 cooperative award over a 12-month period.
BA Decree
A member of Phi Sigma, honorary biology society, he received his bachelor or arts degree from Pacific Lutheran College in 1958.
Kluge, also a member of Phi Sigma, has received a summer fellowship from the National Science Foundation.
He will have earned his master of science degree in biolofty from SC in June. He received his bachelor of arts degree from SC in 1957.
Kluge has already spent a vear in Costa Rica on a National.
I Science Foundation fellowship, where he did research on rep-. tiles and amphibians.
Inna W. Gardner, a graduate student in the School of Library Science, has been awarded a Library of Congress Internship.
One of seven awardees in the United States, she will work at the Library of Congress, Washington, D.C., for one year.
Miss Gardner, who was born in Russia and reads and speaks Russian. German and Spanish, will receive her master of arls degree in library science in June.
Wilson Award
Two other students in the School of Library Science are dividing a grant awarded SC by j the Wilson Publishing Company | of New York.
The $500 stipend will be used by Mrs. Jean Rounds Randall and Ronald Gordon Wilson for graduate work here.
Mrs. Randall is now working toward her master of arts degree in Library Science at SC. She
received her bachelor of arts degree from Whittier College.
Wilson, who earned his bachelor of arts degree from Redlands University and his master of arts degree from UCLA, will receive his master of science degree in libarary science from SC in 1961.
Allan H. Cutler, a student in the School of Philosophy, has won a fellowship from the Dan-forth Foundation.
The graduate Danforth stipend is awarded students who plan a career in college teaching.
Top High School Seniors To Attend Special Classes
A six-week summer honors program for superior high school students about to enter their senior yenr will be conducted by SC from June 20 through July 29. it was announced today.
The 34 students chosen for the program will be able to earn six or seven college credits which will be transferable to sinv university after high school graduation.
Elective Classes All will attend a general studies couise on great issues and Ideas in the growth of Western Civ ili/at ion.
In addition, each student may lake an elective class in astronomy, bacteriology, written communication, engineering drawing. legic, elementary French or introduction to concert music Oth*v elective« will hi* beginning acting, elementary Spanish, public speaking, ihe law of contracts, sales and negotiable in-j
strunvnts.
During ihe evening hours, i seminars will he held in the graduate lounge with members of the faculty.
Other Students Tln.^e seminars are designed to develop in each individual an j a hi lit \ and desire to communicate know ledge and ideas to olher students within the group.
Students will live in campus dormitories, but may go home on weekends. SC officials expressed the view that the superior student's initial experience with college work should be on a lull time resident basis.
Senior Ve*r R> permitting capable young students to take college courses before graduation from high school, the benefit of this university experience can make itself 1 el I in the senior year in high school, said Dr. Norman ter tig, assistant professor of in- j
ternational relations and director of the summer honors program.
Among 20 faculty members will be Dr. J. Wesey Robb, head ; of the department of religion; Dr. Ross N. Berkes, director of the School of International Relations; Dr. Robert Bracken-; bury, education professor; Dr. Paul E. Hadley, head of the department of comparative literature; and Dr. John L. Mohr, head of the biology department.
Fine Arts
Others participating will be Dr. Jay Savage, assistant biology professor.; Dr. John Russell, astronomy department head; Dr. Jules Heller, head of the fine arts department; and Dr. John Crown, head of the piano department.
Application to participate in the summer program must be made to SC by qualified high school students by May 25.
iFC Elects Officers for Coming Year
Newly elected Inter-fraternity Council executive members for Ihe next year will be installed on. Thursday, reported John Bern, IFC advisor.
Officers elect are Ron Good-game, Sig Ep. president; Jim Childs, Phi Delt. vice president; Bert Lewis, Sigma Nu. treasurer; and Jim Markle. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, member-at-large.
Goodgame pledged executive support in continuing the IFC policy of fostering more cooperation between the fraternities and the community and university, and more cooperation among the fraternities' themselves.
“The emphasis placed on academics in the fraternities and the fraternity’s scholarship average has decidedly increased these past few years,” he said. ‘‘And we are confident that in the years to follow it will rise even more.”
The president-elect emphasized that the fraternity of years gone by — with the year long “Hell Week” and horse play — is no more.
"We are not going to be looking for favoritism, but neither do we want to be descriminated against. In the coming year we will shoulder our responsibilities and show what a strong and proud fraternity system is really like,” concluded Goodgame.
Trojan Pianist Begins Series For KNXT-TV
John Crown, piano department head and accomplished concert pianist, premiered a new six-week musical series. “Keynotes,” Sunday ov er KNXT-TV.
“Keynotes” will be televised ‘live’ each week from 1 to 1:30 p.m. and is designed to familiarize the viewer with the many aspects of the musical world.
Crown, who has a outstanding reputation on the concert stage, emphasizes how to listen to music and how to integrate it into the home and school.
Choral («roups
His presentation includes choral and instrumental groups for illustration of certain music as well as his own performance of several selections.
“Music in Film” will be the subject of Crown’s second program this Sunday.
He will describe the place of music in motion pictures from the days of the silent film when a piano in the theater itself provided the music to the present advanced methods.
Cut From Movie
The psychological effect of music on the film score will be demonstrated when a cut from the movie “Spellbound'' will be viewed with and without the music background.
Crown will demonstrate on the piano how music is dubbed and synchronized to the film score.
The SC instructor, noted for his interpretation of the classics as well as contemporary music, attended Hech Conservatory of Music in Frankfurt, Germany, for three years of concentrated study.
He has also spent three years studying at the State Academy in Vienna, Austria.
In 1931 he received a state degree for music teachers from Austrian Government and two years later wras awarded a diploma of the International Competition. an honor bestowed for the first time upon an American pianist.
VOTING PROTEST INVAID, DEAN OF STUDENTS RULES
A protest filed against the ASSC vice presidential election was ruled invalid yesterday by Dr. Robert J. Downey, dean of students.
The ruling declared that there was no factual basis for protesting Sharon Kelley’s victory.
“The protest was not concrete and was based only on hearsay,” Dr. Downey said, explaining his decision.
“All the claims made in the protest were only things which students had said,” he added.
Judy Ashkenazy, a junior, had filed the protest on the grounds that the votes had not been counted properly and that the polls were closed before the 4 p.m. deadline.
Miss Ashkenazy debated the terms “hearsay” by arguing. “I based my claim on what I had been told by Bart Porter, an elections officials.”
“I thought that Porter, who is also on Men’s Judicial, was a responsible person, so I took what he had said to be correct.
“In this sense, what I had said was not hearsay,” she added.
In answer to her charges against the election, Dr. Downey revealed that he himself had been present at the ballot counting to see that there were no errors.
“As an added precaution, Bob Jani, coordinator of special events, counted the ballots by hand,” Downey said.
As to the controversy which arose over the time the polls closed. Dr. Downey said that there was nothing incorrect in that area of the voting procedure either._______________________ ,
Troy Democratic Club Opens Member Drive
Bruin Cheats ill Get Axe
UCLA's recent decision to dismiss all students guilty of cheating makes that university the vanguard of the “get tough” school of thought in the war against cheaters.
“I don’t know of any other university at the present that has a stronger policy on this,” said Byron H. Atkinson, UCLA associate dean of students.
In the past, UCLA had a four-step system of penalties for cheaters. First offenders usually drevy the minimum of failure in the course, while others were dismissed for more flagrant examples of cheating, and associated acts of plagiarism and “ghost writing.”
Not only will cheaters be expelled from UCLA, but students who contribute to the cheating of others or who even give the appearance of cheating will also be dismissed from the university.
Trojan Democratic Club members will hold their first meeting chaired by new officers today as the club initiates a membership drive with a goal 01 1000 students.
The young Democrats — with new leaders Larry Young, president; Bill Shank, Ted Tizyna and Sari Gilfenbain, v ice presi- j d e n ts ; Sue Warschaw, secretary; and Harry Lohdell, treasurer; — will also discuss plans for upcoming activities at the meeting in 103 FH at 2:15 p.m.
“Some members will participate as delegates to the Mock ; National Convention, held at1 Los Angeles State College this j Saturday,” President Young said.
He added that a beach house, party is scheduled for May 6 in I
Santa Monica and the club is seriously trying to bring Sen. Lyndon Johnson, Senate majority leader and presidential hopeful, to speak on campus in May.
Young said that students who join the club now will not orWy benefit by these social events but will be able to participate with the club in the National Convention and presidential campaign this summer.
“The Democratic convention will meet in the Sports Arena during July to select a presidential candidate,’’ he said. “This impotrant historic event will take place only a half-mile from the campus.”
Young takes over as president from Bob Chick. Chick graduates in June.
UCLA Drops Requirement
By PK.NNY LKRNOIX Asst. City Editor
The question of to drop or not to drop physical education has again risen at SC as its Westwood neighbor puts into action a faculty decision to terminate an all-university requirement of FE courses tor graduation at the freshman and sophomore levels.
The pre-Easter ruling made by UCLA’s Academic Senate now places the decision of taking physical education courses in the hands of the students and individual colleges.
May Continue
The Westwood campus colleges may require or not require physical education courses. Consequently, PE may become a requirement for graduation like science or language, but it will be a requirement of the individual college, not the university, as is the current practice at SC.
However, if the individual college does not make physical education a requirement for graduation in its particular field, the student will be free to make his own decision since PE would become an elective.
All Decisions
At UCLA the LAS College has already decided to make PE an elective.
At SC the question of maintaining physical education courses as requirements is decided by an all-university curriculum committee.
This committee also forms decisions on all other courses offered by the university as to whether or not they should be requred for graduation.
"Recently, the School of Commerce petitioned the committee to drop second-year physical education requirements, and their request was complied with,” said Howard W. Patmore, SC registrar.
Effect Debatable
However, although the request came from the school, the decision was made by the committee, he added.
What effect UCLA’s decision may have on SC rulings is debatable.
Dr. Paul E. Hadley, director of the LAS Advisement Office and for many years chairman of the Scholarship Standards Com-(Continued on page 3)
Funeral Service Scheduled For Campus Photographer
Funeral services will be held at 11:30 this morning at the Russian Orthodox Church of the j Holy Virgin Mary for George Krain, 62, SC photographer who died of a heart attack Sunday at his home.
Krain, who had suffered from heart trouble several years, had just returned home from church with his wife, Zena, when he was stricken.
He had joined the SC photo department staff in 1951, after being a newsreel cameraman in China 20 veal's, covering the Sino-Japanese war, the invasion of Manchuria, the “rape of Nanking” and other pre-World War II events in the Orient.
Marked for death by the Japanese, he was able to escape to the United States with the lu'lp
I of the late Admiral Thomas E.
GEORGE KRAIN
. photographer dies
1 Yarnell, USN, whom he met when the Japanese bombed Hi® U.S. gunboat Panay in a Chinese river.
Krain, whose name originally was Krainukov, was born in j Russia where his father was a j general in the Czar's army.
Krain himself served in the White Russian forces in World j War I and then made his way to China where he was employed by the old Universal Newsreel.
His motion pictures of the bombing of the Cathay and Palace hotels in Shanghai in 1937 were hailed as spectacular newsreel films.
Because of the dangers he braved in filming wars and floods in the Orient. Lloyds of London once charged his newsreel employers a $900 per month premium to insure Krain's life.

Last DT to Reveal Name of Miss SC
By RON KIRBY
Daily Trojan Managing Editor
Mirror, mirror on the wall, who's the fairest of them all?
That’s the question that will be answered when the results of the Daily Trojan’s Second Annual Miss University of Southprn California Contest are announced In the final issue of the paper this year.
A picture of the winner of this year's Miss SC contest will grace the cover of a special edition scheduled to hit the stands Friday, May 13.
Miss SC Contest Chairman Ron Zeigler has arranged an all-expense-paid trip to Las Vegas for the winner and guest, evenings for a week as a guest: of local night clubs, a portrait from Garfield, a wardrobe selection from Silverwoods. a trip to Metro-Gold-wyn-Mayer studios and lunch with the stars.
The kickoff dinner, at which all candidates will
be introduced and all details of the contest clarified, will be held Monday, April 25 at Julie’s restaurant.
The only elimination will be conducted on Wednes* as official hostess for this year's Songfest on April 14. Other prizes will be announced later.
Any SC girl currently reigning as the queen or sweetheart of any campus organization is eligible to be entered as a contestant for the Miss SC contest. The Homecoming Queen may not participate in the contest because the committee in charge felt that her entering another queen competition, with the possibility of losing, would reduce the stature of the Troy-dition of Homecoming.
All eligible candidates will receive an invitation to compete through the mail sometime this week. They should send their acceptances to Ron Zeigler at the Daily Trojan, 428 SU, by Friday, April 2*2. day, April 25, when five finalists will be selected, teigler said that no students will take part in the
judging at any time.
Members of the faculty, alumni and administration will handle elimination judging.
The five finalists will have to live through an anxious week before one of them is selected as Miss SC by members of the Greater Los Angeles Press Club on Thursday, April 25. The finalists will be introduced to members of the L.A. Dodger ^baseball team at the Press Club’s Dodger Night prior to the final judging.
Each of the five finalists will be the subject of a feature personality sketch to appear "on the frontpage of the Daily Trojan in the week prior to the selection ol' the winner Miss SC candidates will also be busy as hostesses at Alumni Day, scheduled for Saturday, April 30. „
Members of the committee planning the contest, in addition to Chairman Zeigler, are Songfest Publicity Chairman Tim Elbourne, Songfest Chairman Bart Porter, Mortarboard President Barbara Myers,
Alumni Representative Sandy Quinn, Daily Trojan Editor Larry Fisher and Managing Editor Ron Kibby.
The general theme of the special Daily Trojan supplement, which is being edited by Penny Lernoux, is the revelation of things unknown about SC and things that have happened on campus this year for the first time.
The contest was conceived to establish Miss SC as a exciting highlight to the Spring semester. Winner of last year’s contest and prizes was pretty Miss Linda Livingston.
She testifies to the fun and excitement that is a part »of the contest.
The answer to the question of whcf's the fairest maiden in the land of Troy will be made known in the final edition of the Daily Trojan on May 13. Be sure to get your copy.
PAGE THREE AWS Board Travels South For Regional Meeting
Southern
Cal ifornia
DAI LY
TROJAN
PAGE FOUR Tennis Team Hosts Arizona in Matches Today
VOL. LI
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, TUESDAY, APRIL 19, 1960
NO. 105
Chinese 1A, B Will Combine In One Class
A new Chinese study program. combining two semesters’ work into one. Mill be launched by the department of Asiatic Studies next semester. Dr. Theodore H. Chen, head of the department, announced yesterday.
The new program, made possible by a recent grant from the U.S. Department of Public Education. will enable students to learn Chinese In half the usual time and twice as well, said Dr. Chen.
The main feature of the study plan is the combination of Ihe two-semester introductory Chinese course into a one-semes-ter course, A.S. lOOab.
Native Instructor Students will allend the class five days a week. In addition, they will work with a native instructor in conversation and drill for two hours.
Plans for the new six-u n i t course also include spending one hour a week in the language laboratory.
Work with native instructors on a personal, tutorial basis w ill be one of the most valuable advantages of the new course plan, said Dr. Chen.
Study SphrIoiis The instructors will give students a chance to speak cn an informal basis and allow them to become more involved in 1he language, he said.
“The two-hour drill and sludv sessions aie planned to replace part of the time a student would normally spend at honv in preparation for his lessons.-’
They do not increase the work load of the students but make learning easier and more effective. he stressed.
Chines*« Movies Additional instructors will be hired bv the department to help with the tutoring.
Selected movies in Chinese with vocabulary and explanations provided by the instructional staff are also being planned for the innovatory course, he said.
“The new facilities and methods will enable students to learn to read, speak and write Chinese more fluently and more efficiently in a considerably shorter period of time," he emphasized.
By taking advantage of the new study program, students can fulfill their langauge requirements in one year rather than the normal two.
For example, a student can take A.S. lOOab during the fall semester, receiving" six units credit, and then complete 200ai> during the spring semester, ful-(Continued on page 2)
Time Out From Books For A Dip
Westwood s PE Policy Raises Question Here
ALL WET—About to make a big splash at SC (in the pool, that is) are left to right, Dee Harte, Chsryl Warden, Grant Kuhns and Don Douglas. This is to let the
Daily Trojan Photo By Bob Holste
readers know that the pool is open every day, except Fridays, from twelve to one and again from three to four in the afternoons. It is a'so coen in the evenings.
Graduate Prizes Co to Six In Three Campus Schools
Six SC students in the department of biology, the School of Library Science and the School or Philosophy have been awarded fellowships to aid them in their graduate studies.
David Wake and Arnold Kluge have each been awarded fellowships from the National Science Foundation.
Wake, a graduate student in the department of biology, will receive a $2200 cooperative award over a 12-month period.
BA Decree
A member of Phi Sigma, honorary biology society, he received his bachelor or arts degree from Pacific Lutheran College in 1958.
Kluge, also a member of Phi Sigma, has received a summer fellowship from the National Science Foundation.
He will have earned his master of science degree in biolofty from SC in June. He received his bachelor of arts degree from SC in 1957.
Kluge has already spent a vear in Costa Rica on a National.
I Science Foundation fellowship, where he did research on rep-. tiles and amphibians.
Inna W. Gardner, a graduate student in the School of Library Science, has been awarded a Library of Congress Internship.
One of seven awardees in the United States, she will work at the Library of Congress, Washington, D.C., for one year.
Miss Gardner, who was born in Russia and reads and speaks Russian. German and Spanish, will receive her master of arls degree in library science in June.
Wilson Award
Two other students in the School of Library Science are dividing a grant awarded SC by j the Wilson Publishing Company | of New York.
The $500 stipend will be used by Mrs. Jean Rounds Randall and Ronald Gordon Wilson for graduate work here.
Mrs. Randall is now working toward her master of arts degree in Library Science at SC. She
received her bachelor of arts degree from Whittier College.
Wilson, who earned his bachelor of arts degree from Redlands University and his master of arts degree from UCLA, will receive his master of science degree in libarary science from SC in 1961.
Allan H. Cutler, a student in the School of Philosophy, has won a fellowship from the Dan-forth Foundation.
The graduate Danforth stipend is awarded students who plan a career in college teaching.
Top High School Seniors To Attend Special Classes
A six-week summer honors program for superior high school students about to enter their senior yenr will be conducted by SC from June 20 through July 29. it was announced today.
The 34 students chosen for the program will be able to earn six or seven college credits which will be transferable to sinv university after high school graduation.
Elective Classes All will attend a general studies couise on great issues and Ideas in the growth of Western Civ ili/at ion.
In addition, each student may lake an elective class in astronomy, bacteriology, written communication, engineering drawing. legic, elementary French or introduction to concert music Oth*v elective« will hi* beginning acting, elementary Spanish, public speaking, ihe law of contracts, sales and negotiable in-j
strunvnts.
During ihe evening hours, i seminars will he held in the graduate lounge with members of the faculty.
Other Students Tln.^e seminars are designed to develop in each individual an j a hi lit \ and desire to communicate know ledge and ideas to olher students within the group.
Students will live in campus dormitories, but may go home on weekends. SC officials expressed the view that the superior student's initial experience with college work should be on a lull time resident basis.
Senior Ve*r R> permitting capable young students to take college courses before graduation from high school, the benefit of this university experience can make itself 1 el I in the senior year in high school, said Dr. Norman ter tig, assistant professor of in- j
ternational relations and director of the summer honors program.
Among 20 faculty members will be Dr. J. Wesey Robb, head ; of the department of religion; Dr. Ross N. Berkes, director of the School of International Relations; Dr. Robert Bracken-; bury, education professor; Dr. Paul E. Hadley, head of the department of comparative literature; and Dr. John L. Mohr, head of the biology department.
Fine Arts
Others participating will be Dr. Jay Savage, assistant biology professor.; Dr. John Russell, astronomy department head; Dr. Jules Heller, head of the fine arts department; and Dr. John Crown, head of the piano department.
Application to participate in the summer program must be made to SC by qualified high school students by May 25.
iFC Elects Officers for Coming Year
Newly elected Inter-fraternity Council executive members for Ihe next year will be installed on. Thursday, reported John Bern, IFC advisor.
Officers elect are Ron Good-game, Sig Ep. president; Jim Childs, Phi Delt. vice president; Bert Lewis, Sigma Nu. treasurer; and Jim Markle. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, member-at-large.
Goodgame pledged executive support in continuing the IFC policy of fostering more cooperation between the fraternities and the community and university, and more cooperation among the fraternities' themselves.
“The emphasis placed on academics in the fraternities and the fraternity’s scholarship average has decidedly increased these past few years,” he said. ‘‘And we are confident that in the years to follow it will rise even more.”
The president-elect emphasized that the fraternity of years gone by — with the year long “Hell Week” and horse play — is no more.
"We are not going to be looking for favoritism, but neither do we want to be descriminated against. In the coming year we will shoulder our responsibilities and show what a strong and proud fraternity system is really like,” concluded Goodgame.
Trojan Pianist Begins Series For KNXT-TV
John Crown, piano department head and accomplished concert pianist, premiered a new six-week musical series. “Keynotes,” Sunday ov er KNXT-TV.
“Keynotes” will be televised ‘live’ each week from 1 to 1:30 p.m. and is designed to familiarize the viewer with the many aspects of the musical world.
Crown, who has a outstanding reputation on the concert stage, emphasizes how to listen to music and how to integrate it into the home and school.
Choral («roups
His presentation includes choral and instrumental groups for illustration of certain music as well as his own performance of several selections.
“Music in Film” will be the subject of Crown’s second program this Sunday.
He will describe the place of music in motion pictures from the days of the silent film when a piano in the theater itself provided the music to the present advanced methods.
Cut From Movie
The psychological effect of music on the film score will be demonstrated when a cut from the movie “Spellbound'' will be viewed with and without the music background.
Crown will demonstrate on the piano how music is dubbed and synchronized to the film score.
The SC instructor, noted for his interpretation of the classics as well as contemporary music, attended Hech Conservatory of Music in Frankfurt, Germany, for three years of concentrated study.
He has also spent three years studying at the State Academy in Vienna, Austria.
In 1931 he received a state degree for music teachers from Austrian Government and two years later wras awarded a diploma of the International Competition. an honor bestowed for the first time upon an American pianist.
VOTING PROTEST INVAID, DEAN OF STUDENTS RULES
A protest filed against the ASSC vice presidential election was ruled invalid yesterday by Dr. Robert J. Downey, dean of students.
The ruling declared that there was no factual basis for protesting Sharon Kelley’s victory.
“The protest was not concrete and was based only on hearsay,” Dr. Downey said, explaining his decision.
“All the claims made in the protest were only things which students had said,” he added.
Judy Ashkenazy, a junior, had filed the protest on the grounds that the votes had not been counted properly and that the polls were closed before the 4 p.m. deadline.
Miss Ashkenazy debated the terms “hearsay” by arguing. “I based my claim on what I had been told by Bart Porter, an elections officials.”
“I thought that Porter, who is also on Men’s Judicial, was a responsible person, so I took what he had said to be correct.
“In this sense, what I had said was not hearsay,” she added.
In answer to her charges against the election, Dr. Downey revealed that he himself had been present at the ballot counting to see that there were no errors.
“As an added precaution, Bob Jani, coordinator of special events, counted the ballots by hand,” Downey said.
As to the controversy which arose over the time the polls closed. Dr. Downey said that there was nothing incorrect in that area of the voting procedure either._______________________ ,
Troy Democratic Club Opens Member Drive
Bruin Cheats ill Get Axe
UCLA's recent decision to dismiss all students guilty of cheating makes that university the vanguard of the “get tough” school of thought in the war against cheaters.
“I don’t know of any other university at the present that has a stronger policy on this,” said Byron H. Atkinson, UCLA associate dean of students.
In the past, UCLA had a four-step system of penalties for cheaters. First offenders usually drevy the minimum of failure in the course, while others were dismissed for more flagrant examples of cheating, and associated acts of plagiarism and “ghost writing.”
Not only will cheaters be expelled from UCLA, but students who contribute to the cheating of others or who even give the appearance of cheating will also be dismissed from the university.
Trojan Democratic Club members will hold their first meeting chaired by new officers today as the club initiates a membership drive with a goal 01 1000 students.
The young Democrats — with new leaders Larry Young, president; Bill Shank, Ted Tizyna and Sari Gilfenbain, v ice presi- j d e n ts ; Sue Warschaw, secretary; and Harry Lohdell, treasurer; — will also discuss plans for upcoming activities at the meeting in 103 FH at 2:15 p.m.
“Some members will participate as delegates to the Mock ; National Convention, held at1 Los Angeles State College this j Saturday,” President Young said.
He added that a beach house, party is scheduled for May 6 in I
Santa Monica and the club is seriously trying to bring Sen. Lyndon Johnson, Senate majority leader and presidential hopeful, to speak on campus in May.
Young said that students who join the club now will not orWy benefit by these social events but will be able to participate with the club in the National Convention and presidential campaign this summer.
“The Democratic convention will meet in the Sports Arena during July to select a presidential candidate,’’ he said. “This impotrant historic event will take place only a half-mile from the campus.”
Young takes over as president from Bob Chick. Chick graduates in June.
UCLA Drops Requirement
By PK.NNY LKRNOIX Asst. City Editor
The question of to drop or not to drop physical education has again risen at SC as its Westwood neighbor puts into action a faculty decision to terminate an all-university requirement of FE courses tor graduation at the freshman and sophomore levels.
The pre-Easter ruling made by UCLA’s Academic Senate now places the decision of taking physical education courses in the hands of the students and individual colleges.
May Continue
The Westwood campus colleges may require or not require physical education courses. Consequently, PE may become a requirement for graduation like science or language, but it will be a requirement of the individual college, not the university, as is the current practice at SC.
However, if the individual college does not make physical education a requirement for graduation in its particular field, the student will be free to make his own decision since PE would become an elective.
All Decisions
At UCLA the LAS College has already decided to make PE an elective.
At SC the question of maintaining physical education courses as requirements is decided by an all-university curriculum committee.
This committee also forms decisions on all other courses offered by the university as to whether or not they should be requred for graduation.
"Recently, the School of Commerce petitioned the committee to drop second-year physical education requirements, and their request was complied with,” said Howard W. Patmore, SC registrar.
Effect Debatable
However, although the request came from the school, the decision was made by the committee, he added.
What effect UCLA’s decision may have on SC rulings is debatable.
Dr. Paul E. Hadley, director of the LAS Advisement Office and for many years chairman of the Scholarship Standards Com-(Continued on page 3)
Funeral Service Scheduled For Campus Photographer
Funeral services will be held at 11:30 this morning at the Russian Orthodox Church of the j Holy Virgin Mary for George Krain, 62, SC photographer who died of a heart attack Sunday at his home.
Krain, who had suffered from heart trouble several years, had just returned home from church with his wife, Zena, when he was stricken.
He had joined the SC photo department staff in 1951, after being a newsreel cameraman in China 20 veal's, covering the Sino-Japanese war, the invasion of Manchuria, the “rape of Nanking” and other pre-World War II events in the Orient.
Marked for death by the Japanese, he was able to escape to the United States with the lu'lp
I of the late Admiral Thomas E.
GEORGE KRAIN
. photographer dies
1 Yarnell, USN, whom he met when the Japanese bombed Hi® U.S. gunboat Panay in a Chinese river.
Krain, whose name originally was Krainukov, was born in j Russia where his father was a j general in the Czar's army.
Krain himself served in the White Russian forces in World j War I and then made his way to China where he was employed by the old Universal Newsreel.
His motion pictures of the bombing of the Cathay and Palace hotels in Shanghai in 1937 were hailed as spectacular newsreel films.
Because of the dangers he braved in filming wars and floods in the Orient. Lloyds of London once charged his newsreel employers a $900 per month premium to insure Krain's life.